WE WERE NOT WRONG ALL ALONG IN REFERRING TO THE MURDERER(S) AS "GHETTO THUG" AND "BETE NOIRE."

LA Police: 2 Arrests in Chinese Student Killings

Los Angeles police said Friday that they arrested two suspects in the
killings of two Chinese graduate students who were shot to death near
the University of Southern California campus last month.
LAPD Detective Gus Villanueva announced the arrests and had no further
details pending a news conference scheduled for 7:30 p.m. PDT.
Ming Qu, of Jilin, and Ying Wu, of Hunan, were shot on April 11 while
sitting in a BMW about a mile away from the campus. Both students were
23 years old.
The shooting sent shockwaves through the school, which has the largest
number of international students of any U.S. university. Roughly 19
percent of the school's 38,000 students are from overseas, including
2,500 from China.
After the shooting, Wu was found in the passenger seat and Qu on the
steps of a nearby house where he collapsed while trying to summon help,
police said.

The campus is located in an urban center a few miles south of downtown.
It is across the street from county museums and not far from the Staples
Center arena and a gentrifying area of Victorian homes. Yet it also was
known as an area that had faced high crime and gang activity.
The victims' parents filed a lawsuit on Wednesday alleging the school
made false claims about safety in the "frequently asked questions"
section of its online application.
The 15-page lawsuit accuses USC of hiding behind the word "urban" and
not saying the school is in a high-crime residential area. It also notes
that Chinese students in particular would interpret urban to mean USC
is in a safe area.
"The 'urban' representation misled Chinese students, including Ming Qu,
into believing the area is safe since in China, the more urban the area,
the safer the area," the lawsuit states, claiming USC understood this
is how Chinese students would interpret the description.
USC lawyer Debra Wong Yang said the university was deeply saddened by the deaths but found the lawsuit to be baseless.
The school and city police announced new security measures after the
slayings and promised more video cameras, escorts and patrols.
The additional security will include sending over 30 more officers to
the department division that handles the USC area, and the university
will pay for four additional officers to patrol the student residential
neighborhoods, Police Chief Charlie Beck said.